The writers
were always a problem...
-Arthur
Goldschmidt, one of the New Deal architects of Federal One, (in an interview
with Jerre Mangione, March 1969)
The Federal
Writers' Project was conceived of by New Deal administrators as a part
of Federal One, the common name for the four WPA arts programs (Mangione
4). In the years leading up to the creation of the FWP, professional organizations
had started to petition the federal government for a project of national
scope. They demanded something more appropriate to writers' training and
interest than the blue-collar opportunities afforded by other WPA employment
programs. A coherent plan was finally developed for a program that could
offer writers a certain degree of artistic freedom without compromising
the position of the government, in whose name the work would appear (Mangione
42).
The idea
was for an American guidebook. The most contemporary handbook to the United
States was the Baedeker guide, first published in 1893 and revised in
1909, at this point quite outdated and also Anglicized (Mangione 46).
The FWP was to produce a "public Baedeker." The official announcement
read:
...employment
of writers, editors, historians, research workers, art critics, architects,
archeologists, map draftsmen, geologists, and other professional workers
for the preparation of an American Guide and the accumulation of new
research material on matters of local, historical, art and scientific
interest in the United States; preparation of a complete encyclopedia
of government functions and periodical publications in Washington;
and the preparation of a limited number of special studies in the
arts, history, economics, sociology, etc., by qualified writers on
relief. (Mangione 47)
The American
Guide was expected to be a boon to the business community by stimulating
travel, and to encourage pride in local histories and heritages (Katherine
Davidson). Henry Alsberg, previously an editorial writer and foreign correspondent,
was appointed Director. State directors were sought out. The project commenced
on November 1st, 1935.
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Juliet Gorman, May 2001
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